• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: Competition News

Winners of the SKYHIVE Timber Skyscraper competition speculate on sustainable tall buildings

By Niall Patrick Walsh|

Friday, May 26, 2023

First Prize: Space Gradients by Yanyan Zhang

Buildner has announced the results of their latest SKYHIVE Timber Skyscraper competition. The annual contest, now in its sixth edition, sought “iconic and unique designers for a high-rise structure,” with this year featuring the “added twist” of requiring a skyscraper that was primarily constructed out of timber.

The competition did not set a defined site and instead called on participants to select any hypothetical site measuring 426ft x 262ft (130m x 80m), which could be accessed by roads on two sides. “It is important that designs show consideration for the impact on the surrounding environment, as well as how the increase in inhabitants will affect the current infrastructure, pollution levels, economic division, and urban sprawl,” the brief added.

Take a look at the winning schemes:

First Prize: Space Gradients by Yanyan Zhang (United States)

First Prize: Space Gradients by Yanyan Zhang

Jury comment excerpt: “Space Gradients explores the potential of the post and beam structure, challenging the limitations of this well-known structural system. The intent of the project is to create a variety of spaces by testing variations in column density and beam depth, with a denser system of beams yielding smaller spaces at the base of the building, and a sparser set of columns with deeper beams yielding larger spaces at the top of the building, opening the upper floors for greater views. The project is an exploration in simple form and timber structure which offers a great range of spaces.”

Second Prize: The Pro-sumer by Sophia Michopoulou (Greece)

Second Prize: The Pro-sumer by Sophia Michopoulou

Jury comment excerpt: “The Pro-sumer is an organic office space structure conceived to produce, consume and recycle water, energy, food and waste in an effort to reduce its carbon footprint. Situated theoretically in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, the tower is designed in consideration of its warm and humid climate, as well as the tidal waters in which it is proposed to be constructed. The high-rise project makes use of solar panels and deep balconies to engage and protect spaces from the sunlight.”

Third Prize and Buildner Student Award: Rebuilding Green by Beom Seok Ko, Shiwon Kim, Joo Hye Lim, and Eun A Jeong (Hongik University, South Korea)

Third Prize and Buildner Student Award: Rebuilding Green by Beom Seok Ko, Shiwon Kim, Joo Hye Lim, and Eun A Jeong

Jury comment excerpt: “Rebuilding Green is a study that responds to desertification - the phenomenon in which forests and meadows in dry climates disappear and become deserts as rivers and lakes dry. The tower proposal consists of commercial, laboratory and residential facilities on desert sites in Mongolia. It makes use of a repetitive building module that can be constructed and later deconstructed using a centralized integrated crane. The intent for the project is to construct a temporary laboratory facility that aids in greening a region of 10,000 square meters by producing plant specimens for a new forest. Once complete, the building could be deconstructed and moved to a new location.”

Buildner Sustainability Award: A New Weave in the Pattern - Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary by Michał Spólnik and Marcin Kitala (Poland)

Buildner Sustainability Award: A New Weave in the Pattern - Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary by Michał Spólnik and Marcin Kitala

Jury comment excerpt: “New Weave in the Pattern is a timber tower designed to address declining monarch butterfly populations, a phenomenon resulting in a general sense from deforestation. The project, conceived for a site in Mexico where monarch butterflies begin their annual migration. The tower is designed according to a module of joints that gives the structure a branchlike quality, mimicking the form of trees and offering butterflies a multitude of niches, nooks and crannies to be protected.”

More information on the competition series can be found on Buildner’s official website here.

RELATED COMPETITION SKYHIVE Timber Skyscraper / Edition #6
RELATED NEWS The winning SKYHIVE 2020 Skyscraper Challenge designs
RELATED NEWS The winning SKYHIVE Skyscraper Challenge ideas

Related

buildner architecture competitions ● competition ● mass timber ● skyhive ● tall building ● buildner ● tower ● timber ● wood

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Winners of the SKYHIVE Timber Skyscraper competition speculate on sustainable tall buildings

2023 Design Educates Awards honors projects that deliver lasting impact for users and the environment

Only one week left to enter Archinect's Generative Futures AI Storytelling Challenge

CTBUH announces record-breaking round of 2023 Award of Excellence winners

Herzog & de Meuron accepts 2023 Louis I. Kahn Award in Philadelphia

Meet the prize sponsors of Archinect's Generative Futures AI Storytelling Challenge

The Landscape Architecture Foundation celebrates 2023 undergrad and graduate Olmsted Scholars

Gensler honors four interior design students with 2023 Brinkmann Scholarship

2023 World Landscape Architecture Award winners announced

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Design a beer spa in Iceland's captivating landscape. Iceland Beer Spa competition is launched!

David Chipperfield Architects and Ester Bruzkus Architekten unveil competition-winning design for NOBU hotel and restaurant in Hamburg

New London Architecture presents the eight Don't Move, Improve! 2023 winners

Diébédo Francis Kéré awarded inaugural Cosanti Medal for social and sustainable design

Student teams from The University of Minnesota Twin Cities, The Cooper Union, and Ball State among winners of the 2023 Solar Decathlon Design and Build Challenge

Venice Architecture Biennale honors 2023 Golden Lion & Silver Lion participations winners

Brazil's 'Terra [Earth]' pavilion awarded Golden Lion for best National Participation in Venice

Next page » Loading

Winners of the SKYHIVE Timber Skyscraper competition speculate on sustainable tall buildings

By Niall Patrick Walsh|

Friday, May 26, 2023

Share

First Prize: Space Gradients by Yanyan Zhang

Related

buildner architecture competitions ● competition ● mass timber ● skyhive ● tall building ● buildner ● tower ● timber ● wood

Buildner has announced the results of their latest SKYHIVE Timber Skyscraper competition. The annual contest, now in its sixth edition, sought “iconic and unique designers for a high-rise structure,” with this year featuring the “added twist” of requiring a skyscraper that was primarily constructed out of timber.

The competition did not set a defined site and instead called on participants to select any hypothetical site measuring 426ft x 262ft (130m x 80m), which could be accessed by roads on two sides. “It is important that designs show consideration for the impact on the surrounding environment, as well as how the increase in inhabitants will affect the current infrastructure, pollution levels, economic division, and urban sprawl,” the brief added.

Take a look at the winning schemes:

First Prize: Space Gradients by Yanyan Zhang (United States)

First Prize: Space Gradients by Yanyan Zhang

Jury comment excerpt: “Space Gradients explores the potential of the post and beam structure, challenging the limitations of this well-known structural system. The intent of the project is to create a variety of spaces by testing variations in column density and beam depth, with a denser system of beams yielding smaller spaces at the base of the building, and a sparser set of columns with deeper beams yielding larger spaces at the top of the building, opening the upper floors for greater views. The project is an exploration in simple form and timber structure which offers a great range of spaces.”

Second Prize: The Pro-sumer by Sophia Michopoulou (Greece)

Second Prize: The Pro-sumer by Sophia Michopoulou

Jury comment excerpt: “The Pro-sumer is an organic office space structure conceived to produce, consume and recycle water, energy, food and waste in an effort to reduce its carbon footprint. Situated theoretically in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, the tower is designed in consideration of its warm and humid climate, as well as the tidal waters in which it is proposed to be constructed. The high-rise project makes use of solar panels and deep balconies to engage and protect spaces from the sunlight.”

Third Prize and Buildner Student Award: Rebuilding Green by Beom Seok Ko, Shiwon Kim, Joo Hye Lim, and Eun A Jeong (Hongik University, South Korea)

Third Prize and Buildner Student Award: Rebuilding Green by Beom Seok Ko, Shiwon Kim, Joo Hye Lim, and Eun A Jeong

Jury comment excerpt: “Rebuilding Green is a study that responds to desertification - the phenomenon in which forests and meadows in dry climates disappear and become deserts as rivers and lakes dry. The tower proposal consists of commercial, laboratory and residential facilities on desert sites in Mongolia. It makes use of a repetitive building module that can be constructed and later deconstructed using a centralized integrated crane. The intent for the project is to construct a temporary laboratory facility that aids in greening a region of 10,000 square meters by producing plant specimens for a new forest. Once complete, the building could be deconstructed and moved to a new location.”

Buildner Sustainability Award: A New Weave in the Pattern - Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary by Michał Spólnik and Marcin Kitala (Poland)

Buildner Sustainability Award: A New Weave in the Pattern - Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary by Michał Spólnik and Marcin Kitala

Jury comment excerpt: “New Weave in the Pattern is a timber tower designed to address declining monarch butterfly populations, a phenomenon resulting in a general sense from deforestation. The project, conceived for a site in Mexico where monarch butterflies begin their annual migration. The tower is designed according to a module of joints that gives the structure a branchlike quality, mimicking the form of trees and offering butterflies a multitude of niches, nooks and crannies to be protected.”

More information on the competition series can be found on Buildner’s official website here.

RELATED COMPETITION SKYHIVE Timber Skyscraper / Edition #6
RELATED NEWS The winning SKYHIVE 2020 Skyscraper Challenge designs
RELATED NEWS The winning SKYHIVE Skyscraper Challenge ideas

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Project Manager for Wayfinding Firm

Via Collective, Inc.

Project Manager for Wayfinding Firm

New York, NY, US

Director/Senior Interiors PM - $200-235k

PARADE STAFFING

Director/Senior Interiors PM - $200-235k

New York, NY, US

Senior Project Architect

Strada Architecture LLC

Senior Project Architect

Chapel Hill, NC, US

Senior Interior Designer / Senior Interior Architect

Strada Architecture LLC

Senior Interior Designer / Senior Interior Architect

Philadelphia, PA, US

Project Director

Project Director

New York, NY, US

Project Manager

Abeco Construction

Project Manager

Brooklyn, NY, US

Marketing Director

Brickmoon Design

Marketing Director

Houston, TX, US

Job Captain / Intermediate Designer

TOLO Architecture

Job Captain / Intermediate Designer

Los Angeles, CA, US

Architect / Designer, 5-8 Years of Experience

Gluckman Tang Architects

Architect / Designer, 5-8 Years of Experience

New York, NY, US

Architectural Designer

Studio AR&D Architects

Architectural Designer

Los Angeles, CA, US

Next page » Loading